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heech said:That dude really is soooooooo wrong.
Here's a link from the AAMC explaining Medicare's role in funding the vast majority of residency positions in this country.
http://www.aamc.org/advocacy/library/gme/gme0001.htm
The payments (which I understand are around $80k-$100k per residency spot) are for the resident's salaries, as well as compensation for other costs associated with training the resident. No medicare (or reduced medicare payments), no system for residency training as we know it.
And that's also part of the reason we might be struggling with residency issues. (I'm surprised this hasn't been talked about on this forum.) The allocation of residency spots have been *frozen* since 1996 thanks to federal government shananigans, meaning that there've been essentially no change for 10 years. That means all of the schools created since 1996, to date, hasn't had a single residency spot paid for by medicare.
As of July 1st of this year, there's going to be a very significant reallocation of residency spots based on proven need/ability to fill spots.
That means parts of the country growing in population (special priorities given for rural and small-city programs) should see a dramatic boost in residency programs next year. And I'm sure that means all the newer schools (especially in communities with large/growing populations) will be getting the funding to set up many, many more residency spots.
Reading that brochure, one discovers that this is to pay for the Medicare patient load handled by the residents. Also, Medicare limits the number of residents covered on this, but it does not dictate how many residency positions there are. You can spin that how you want, but Medicare is only doing what it is designed to do and nothing more. It also mentions that funding comes from many other sources, it is just that they are often the largest single source.
This is similar to the argument where people say the insurance company won't let them get an organ transplant. The insurance company doesn't say that, they just say they won't pay for it if you do.